VIII.—TuHe FLora oF NEWFOUNDLAND, LABRADOR, and ST. 
PIERRE ET MIQUELON: Part III.—By THE Rev. ARTHUR 
C. WaGuHorNE, Bay of Islunds, Newfoundland. 
(Read May 9th, 1898.) 
A change of residence, and the charge of a new and extensive 
parish, are the hindrances which are chiefly accountable for 
the delay in the continuance of this series of papers, of which 
the first part appeared in the Z'ransactions of the Institute, 
Vol. VIIE (Ser. 2, Vol. I), page 359; and the second part in 
Vol. 1X (Ser, 2, Vol. IL), page 17. 
To the prefatory remarks of the two preceding papers, a few 
notes should here be added :— 
1. The Part I. here first presented is made up of Polypetalous 
plants which have been added to our Newfoundland or Labrador 
lists of plants since 1895. 
2. These have been obtained from three sources, chiefly : 
(a) Professor Macoun’s Contributions from the Herbarium 
of the Geological Survey of Canada, (Parts I.—VI.); these are 
indicated herein briefly as “C. H. Geo. 8. of C.” 
(b) A list of Newfoundland plants collected by Mr. A. B. 
Bullman, B. A. Se. (of H. M. Newfoundland Survey). The 
plants were collected by him on the West coast in 1896, and in 
White Bay in 1897. This gentlemen modestly says that he lays 
no claim to be a botanist, so that his determinations may be 
subject to revision, a fate which befalls even those of men who 
are botanists. If Mr. Bullman’s decisions are sustained as to 
certain plants, his list adds fifteen names to our flora. 
(c) My own collections since 1895 in the Bay of Islands, and 
a week while in Bay St. George, and a trip across the country 
in 1895, and to Brenton and Clode Sound in Bonavista Bay, on 
the East coast. At Mr. Reid’s stone quarry, about 80 miles from 
the Bay of Islands, on both sides of the railway track, by the 
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